Description
Contextual inquiry defines four principles to guide the interaction: * Context—Advantages
Contextual inquiry offers the following advantages over other customer research methods: * The open-ended nature of the interaction makes it possible to reveal tacit knowledge, knowledge about their own work process that users themselves are not consciously aware of. Tacit knowledge has traditionally been very hard for researchers to uncover. * The information produced by contextual inquiry is highly reliable. Surveys and questionnaires assume the questions they include are important. Traditional usability tests assume the tasks the user is asked to perform are relevant. Contextual inquiries focus on the work users need to accomplish, done their way—so it is always relevant to the user. And because it's their own work, the users are more committed to it than they would be to a sample task. * The information produced by contextual inquiry is highly detailed. Marketing methods such as surveys produce high-level information but not the detailed work practice data needed to design products. It is very difficult to get this level of detail any other way. * Contextual inquiry is a very flexible technique. Contextual inquiries have been conducted in homes, offices, hospital OPDs, operating theaters, automobiles, factory floors, construction sites, maintenance tunnels, and chip fabrication labs, among many other places.Limitations
Contextual inquiry has the following limitations: * Contextual inquiry is resource-intensive. It requires travel to the informant's site, a few hours with each user, and then a few more hours to interpret the results of the interview.History of the method
Contextual inquiry was first referenced as a "phenomenological research method" in a paper by Whiteside, Bennet, and Holtzblatt in 1988,J. Whiteside, J. Bennett, and K. Holtzblatt, "Usability Engineering: Our Experience and Evolution," Handbook of Human Computer Interaction, M. Helander (Ed.). New York: North Holland, 1988. which lays out much of the justification for using qualitative research methods in design. It was first fully described as a method in its own right by Wixon, Holtzblatt, and Knox in 1990, where comparisons with other research methods are offered. It is most fully described by Holtzblatt and Beyer in 1995.Beyer, H. and Holtzblatt, K. "Apprenticing with the Customer," Communications of the ACM, May 1995. Contextual inquiry was extended to the full contextual design methodology by Beyer and Holtzblatt between 1988 and 1992. Contextual design was briefly described by them for Communications of the ACM in 1995, and was fully described in ''Contextual Design'' in 1997.Beyer, H. and Holtzblatt, K., Contextual Design: Defining Customer-Centered Systems, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., San Francisco (1997). Work models as a way of capturing representations of user work during interpretation sessions were first briefly described by Beyer and Holtzblatt in 1993K. Holtzblatt and H. Beyer, "Making Customer-Centered Design Work for Teams," Communications of the ACM, October 1993. and then more fully in 1995.K. Holtzblatt and H. Beyer, "Representing work for the Purpose of Design," in Representations of Work, HICSS Monograph (Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences), January 1994. Lucy Suchman, Editor.See also
* Ethnography * ScenarioReferences
{{reflistFurther reading
* S. Jones, ''Learning DECwrite in the Workplace; Using Contextual Inquiry to Articulate Learning''. Internal Digital Report: DEC-TR 677, December 1989. *: An early use of CI to analyze the use of a software product. * L. Cohen, ''Quality Function Deployment: How to Make QFD Work for You''. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts, 1995. *: Discusses the use of CI in Quality Function Deployment * D. Wixon and J. Ramey (Eds.), ''Field Methods Case Book for Product Design''. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., NY, NY, 1996. *: This book describes the experience of several different practitioners using field methods. Several people who have used Contextual Inquiry and Contextual Design have written chapters describing their experiences. This is a good resource for anyone wanting to adopt customer-centered methods in their own organization. It includes a chapter by Holtzblatt and Beyer describing the whole Contextual Design process. * Nardi, B. ''Context and Consciousness : Activity Theory and Human-Computer Interaction''. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, Cambridge, MA, USA ©1995External links